VeriSign's rapid DNS updates in .com/.net

> the primary beneficiaries of this new functionality are spammers and
> other malfeasants

... The primary beneficiaries are all

                 ^
                 intended

current and future .com/.net domain holders:

I'm not talking about intended beneficiaries. I agree with your statement
when applied to intended beneficiaries. I'm talking about the character
of the preponderance of actual beneficiaries, whether measured by number
of domain registration events per unit time, or number of dollars of income
enabled by the speediness of the "fast update" VeriSign is now announcing.

... I also stated in that message that VeriSign has no intention of
changing the current 48-hour TTL on delegation NS RRsets in .com/.net.

Right. And I hope you are able to stick to that plan in the face of what
I think will be gigantic pressure, from both registrants and competitors,
to lower it.

I agree with Daniel's earlier statement that this is an education
issue. Does anyone want to co-author an Internet-Draft on the topic
of choosing appropriate TTLs?

I can't think of anyone who could do it better than you could, Matt. I
know I offered to help a while back, but we never really got started on it,
and after being named as a "sitefinder co-conspirator" in your lawsuit
against ICANN, I think I'll hold off on co-authoring anything with any
VeriSign employee for the time being.

I'm not talking about intended beneficiaries. I agree with your statement
when applied to intended beneficiaries. I'm talking about the character
of the preponderance of actual beneficiaries, whether measured by number
of domain registration events per unit time, or number of dollars of income
enabled by the speediness of the "fast update" VeriSign is now announcing.

paying net customers want quick adds/updates/deletes. verisign's
competitors offer this. versign will offer this. get over it.

randy

Randy Bush <randy@psg.com> writes:

> I'm not talking about intended beneficiaries. I agree with your statement
> when applied to intended beneficiaries. I'm talking about the character
> of the preponderance of actual beneficiaries, whether measured by number
> of domain registration events per unit time, or number of dollars of income
> enabled by the speediness of the "fast update" VeriSign is now announcing.

paying net customers want quick adds/updates/deletes. verisign's
competitors offer this. versign will offer this. get over it.

Nothing wrong with showing the last 30 days worth of changes via
whois; it would address Paul's concerns and make it painfully obvious
when someone is monkeying around.

                                        ---Rob